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Topic: Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh


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  Encyclopedia: List of Iranians   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Sheykh Mohammad Tabrizi, or Khiabani (1880 - 1920), was a Persian cleric and a representative to the parliament.
Mohammad Reza Aref (محمدرضا عارف) (born 1941 in Yazd) is an Iranian politician and university professor.
Speaker Haddad-Adel Gholam Ali Haddad-Adel (غلامعلی حداد عادل in Persian) born in 1945 in Tehran, Iran, is the Speaker of the Parliament of Iran.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/List-of-Iranians   (6435 words)

  
 Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh
Sayyed Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh holds a place of singular distinction in contemporary Persian literature as one of the innovators of the modern literary language, and the first to introduce the techniques of European short-story writing to Iran.
Jamalzadeh was only sixteen when he left Iran for good, but the impression left on him by his childhood training and environment proved indelible.
Jamalzadeh, however, dislikes not the idea of religion but the manifestations of arbitrary and inhuman application of religious tenets by their zealous and bigoted interpreters and adherents.
www.farhangsara.com /jamalzadeh.htm   (2050 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh, the founder of the European-style Persian short-story genre, was born in Isfahan into a middle-class family.
Jamalzadeh's father, Sayyid Jamal al-Din Isfahani, a progressive mullah, rose against despotism and delivered fiery speeches against the government, speeches which inspired his son but landed himself in prison where he was poisoned.
The public, especially the clergy, loathed Jamalzadeh's portrayal of their country to the degree that copies of the book were burned in public squares.
www.angelfire.com /rnb/bashiri/Authors/Jamalzadeh.html   (889 words)

  
 IranDokht - Artist   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
For Jamalzadeh, the function of prose fiction is two-fold: first, to educate the masses and second, to preserve the common expressions of the people.
Jamalzadeh's call for "literary democracy" in 1921 was very much in tune with the political and social events of the time.
Jamalzadeh's main interest in the language of the people was reflected in his recording of colloquial expressions and popular proverbs, while Hedayat focused for the most part on collecting folklore and describing the mores of the people.
www.irandokht.com /editorial/index4.php?area=pro§ionID=8&editorialID=860   (5880 words)

  
 List of Iranians - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ali Akbar Davar, Minister, and founder of Iran's modern Judiciary system.
Ali Abdolalizadehh, minister of housing and urban development
Zahra Eshraghi, granddaughter of Ayatollah Khomeini and wife of Mohammad Reza Khatami
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/List_of_Iranians   (379 words)

  
 Jamalzadeh, Mohammad Ali --  Encyclopædia Britannica
Persian Mohammad 'Ali Jamalzadeh, Jamalzadeh also transliterated Jamalzada, Jamal-zadeh, or Jamalzadah Iranian prose writer who became one of the most important figures in 20th-century Persian literature.
The founder of Pakistan was Mohammed Ali Jinnah.
When Muhammad 'Ali (also spelled Mehemet Ali) was named pasha of Egypt by the Ottoman Empire, he founded a dynasty that ruled for more than 100 years and paved the way for the modern Egyptian state.
www.britannica.com /eb/article?tocId=9043292&query=esfahan&ct=   (779 words)

  
 Welcome to Netiran!   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh the founder of the European-style Persian short-story genre,holds a place of singular distinction in contemporary Persian literature as one of the innovators of the modern literary language, and the first to introduce the techniques of European short-story writing to Iran.
He was born in Isfahan into a middle-class family in 1895.The date of his birth is debated;but in Ketab-e Hunar, in his own hand,January 24,1892 is mentioned.It is noteworthy to add that, at the end of his life, even he himself was not quite sure of the exact year.
Jamalzadeh lived in Iran only until the age of twelve or thirteen.but the impression left on him by his childhood training and environment proved indelible.
www.netiran.com /?fn=whod(830,,)   (1260 words)

  
 ★ Reviews for Ali,_Muhammad
Ali is a symbol, yes, but an individual too, and the better essays show him as a multifaceted, intelligent, and controversial person.
Sayyed Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh was one of the major modern Iranian writers, and his father was in the eye of the typhoon of the violent reformer vs. tradionalist and laicist vs. islamist debates in Iran at the beginning of the 20th century.
I was also surprised to learn that the Ali of today--though not the least bit regretful of his decision to align himself with Elijah Muhammad in the early 1960's--no longer holds the Nation Of Islam's founder in particularly high regard.
authors.booksunderreview.com /A/Ali,_Muhammad   (2648 words)

  
 DIFFERENCE IN APPROACH TO ISLAMIC HERITAGE
In Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh's "Persian is [as Sweet as] Sugar," Persian and Iranian are synonymous, as are Arab (or French or Azarbaijani) and foreign.
While Jamalzadeh regards Islam as integral to an Iranian national identity, he objects to a backward Islam, and to Arabness as foreign.
Jamalzadeh associates an Arab Other with religious superstition and backwardness, and defines the Iranian Self as Persian and Muslim.
www.arizonapersian.com /iran/_disc4/0000017a.htm   (2254 words)

  
 www.24April1915.com
Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh, the Iranian famous writer, the innovator of Persian modern story-writing, and the writer of "Once upon a Time", "Lunatic Asylum" and "The Water's Way" books, crossed from the land of death and murder, exactly in the days that Armenians were vagrant in the deserts and the Demon of death plumaged on them.
Jamalzadeh, who left Berlin for Baghdad in spring of 1915, first went to Istanbul and then Aleppo and Baghdad, and returned from the same way.
Summery of Jamalzadeh's observations of Armenian genocide in Ottoman
www.24april1915.com /eng/testimonies.html   (984 words)

  
 The Book & The Computer   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
In 1921 Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh's collection of short stories, Yaki bud yaki nabud(Once Upon a Time), was published, thus ushering in a new era of Persian prose.
One particularly horrific example of this has been the phenomenon of "chain murders," which entails the kidnapping and murder of a series of victims, whose bodies are then left out to be found.
Mohammad Mokhtari and Jafar Pouyandeh are just two of the writers who have died in this way.
www.honco.net /os/index_0204.html   (3567 words)

  
 Persian Language & Literature: Ali Akbar Dehkhoda
irza Ali Akbar Ghazvini, known as Dehkhoda, the Persian literary scholar, poet, author, and a political and social critic, was born in Tehran circa 1879.
With the bombardment of the Iranian Parliament (Majlis) by Mohammad Ali Shah, and the temporary setback in the Constitutional Movement, Dehkhoda was forced into exile while his friend and collaborator, Sur Esrafil was executed by the order of the Shah in Bagh-e Shah.
In 1958, the responsibility of Loghat nameh was transferred to the Tehran University's Literature Department and Dr. Mo'in was appointed as the head of the Dehkhoda Institute.
www.iranchamber.com /literature/adehkhoda/ali_akbar_dehkhoda.php   (1909 words)

  
 Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh (Isfahan, 1892 - Geneva, 1997) was one of the influential Iranian writers of the 20th century.
Some people call him "the Father of Modern Iranian Story Writing".
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Mohammad_Ali_Jamalzadeh   (108 words)

  
 Abolhassan Hakimi
Abolhassan was a contemporary of the famous and much respected Iranian writer Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh who was similarly educated in Beirut and found a position with the Persian delegation.
Around 1916 he ended up in Berlin collaborating with Jamalzadeh and Hassan Taghizadeh the famous Iranian (fierce) revolutionary, modernist, scholar and politician who had established Kaveh, a Journal of Iranian studies called Kaveh in Berlin to enlighten or in their language, "awaken" the Iranians.
According to Jamalzadeh, Abolhassan contributed under the pseudonym of "Manouchehr Farssad" but for unknown reasons fell out with Taghizadeh and returned to Lausanne, the headquarters of the League of Nations.
home.online.no /~hhakimi/album/abolhassan/abh.htm   (1175 words)

  
 Iran Daily
Mohammad Hossein Bahrol-Oloumi, deputy head of the ICHTO for protecting and refurbishing historical sites told CHN that the Vatican has agreed to cover the costs of refurbishing the historic church.
The author opined that happiness and grief are inescapable parts of the lives of all individuals.
He was given the award because of his valuable research works on Islamic thought as well as his university teachings in Iran and abroad.
www.iran-daily.com /1384/2296/html/art.htm   (1509 words)

  
 Iranica.com - HEDAYAT, SADEQ (Heda@yat, S®a@deq)
The term Rab¿a (even though it does not exist in this sense in Arabic) was adapted at the suggestion of Farza@d as a witty distinction from Sab¿a (short for odaba@-ye sab¿a "the seven men of letters"), a term used by a well-known publisher to refer to a group of older, traditional literati of the time.
It was difficult to obtain a residency permit for France or to obtain a visa for Switzerland, where his friend Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh lived and worked; and the possibility of going to London, where Mas¿ud Farza@d resided, failed to materialize.
This was in the tradition set by Jamalzadeh, enhanced by Hedayat, and passed on to S®a@deq Ùubak and Jala@l Al-e Ahámad in their earlier works.
www.iranica.com /articles/v12f2/v12f2004a.html   (4310 words)

  
 Indo-Iranian Languages and Literatures - Jamalzadah, Muhammad Ali. - What's Been Published   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Indo-Iranian Languages and Literatures - Jamalzadah, Muhammad Ali.
0691065632 - Isfahan is half the world : memories of a Persian boyhood / Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh ; translated by W.L. Heston.
0933273002 - Once upon a time = (Yeki bud, yeki nabud) / Mohammad Ali Jamalzada ; translated from the Persian by Heshmat Moayyad and Paul Sprachman.
www.pitbossannie.com /aus-pk-jamalzadah-muhammad-ali.html   (65 words)

  
 Disenchanted Worlds:Secularization and Democratization in the Middle East
This was followed by Islamic reformists such as Mohammad 'Abduh and Rashid Reda in Egypt, and constitutional revolutions such as those in Iran, Egypt, and Turkey.
The leading Iranian intellectuals in the development of a secular nationalist ideology were Mirza Malkam Khan, Mirza Fath Ali Akhundzadeh, Mirza Agha Khan Kermani, Hassan Taqizadeh, Seyyed Jamal ed-Din Esfahani and his son Seyed Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh, Sadeq Hedayat, and Ahmad Kasravi.
In spite of the fact that Mohammad Ali Jinah (1876-1948) was himself a thoroughly secular, British-educated barrister, he led the Muslims into partition from India.
www2.hawaii.edu /~majid/draft_papers/secularization/secularization.html   (9099 words)

  
 [No title]
Ali Paydarfar, "Differential Life-Styles Between Migrants and Nonmigrants: A Case Study of the City of Shiraz, Iran," Demography 11 (1974): 509-520.
Mohammad Taqi Rahnema'i, "L'extension de Téhéran et les mutations de son environment rural," in Chahryar Adle and Bernard Hourcade, eds., Téhéran: Capitale bicentenaire, (Paris and Teheran: Institut Français de Recherche en Iran, 1992), pp.
Mohammad Reza Djalili, Diplomatie islamique: stratégie internationale du Khomeynisme (Paris: P.U.F., 1989), pp.
web.mit.edu /isg/iranica.html   (14622 words)

  
 Heshmat Moayyad
Editio princeps of the 12th century text by Sadid al-Din Mohammad Ghaznavi.Tehran, 1961.
Editio princeps of the 15th century text by Darvish Ali Buzgani, Tehran, 1966.
Studies in Honor of Mohammad Ali Jazayery, ed.
humanities.uchicago.edu /depts/nelc/facultypages/moayyad/index.html   (525 words)

  
 PBS Online: Beyond the Veil -Iranian Literature
Authors such as Ali Akbar Dehkhoda (1879-1956), Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh (1892-1997), and later Sadegh Hedayat (1903-1951) contributed in forging a simple prose language which could accesible ordinary people.
This modern prose enabled short story tellers and novelists to use literature to engage readers in socio-political issues of the society.
Mohammad Mehdi Khorrami, Ph.D. is a professor of Persian Literature and Language at New York University.
www.internews.org /visavis/btvpagestxt/IranianLiterature.html   (666 words)

  
 Social Research: The Quest for the "real" woman in the Iranian novel - Part V: representations of privacy in literature ...
Some of the foremost advocates of this cultural revolution started a movement for creating what one of its proponents, Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh, called a "democratization" of the Persian language.
As women opened up new public spaces through their more active presence on the social scene, the new literary and artistic forms--condemned by the reactionaries--such as the novel, theatre, music, and film provided new potentials for this reality.
Two prominent clerics, Sheikh Fazlolah Nuri and Sayyid' Ali Shushtari--mentors of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini--even issued fatwas (religious decrees) against the public education of women.
www.findarticles.com /cf_0/m2267/3_70/110737788/p1/article.jhtml   (1251 words)

  
 Daftar Tokoh Iran - Wikipedia
Ali Akbar Davar, Menteri, dan pendiri sistem peradilan modern Iran
Mohammad Javad Bahonar, PM Mohammad Reza Bahonar, wakil pembicara parlemen
Zahra Eshraghi, cucu Ayatollah Khomeini dan istri Mohammad Reza Khatami
id.wikipedia.org /wiki/Daftar_Tokoh_Iran   (301 words)

  
 language   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
For example, the novels and poems of such literary figures as Mehdi Akhavan-e Sales, Sadeq Chubak, Sadeq Hedayat, Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh, and Nader Naderpour are riven with Persian chauvinism and marred by ethnic slurs against the Arabs.
The earlier advocates of this purification project were such intellectuals as Mirza Fath `Ali Akhundzadah (1812-1878), and Mirza Malkam Khan (1833-1908).
For a discussion of the failure of this project, see Mohammad Ali Jazayery: “Western Influence in Contemporary Persian: A General View,” Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, vol.
faculty.maxwell.syr.edu /mborouje/language.html   (4803 words)

  
 Iran Heritage Foundation   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Together with Jamalzadeh he founded modern Persian fiction but was the sole founder of modernist fiction in Iran.
From the very beginning of his literary career, Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh paid special attention to Persian popular Culture.
His first collection of short stories Yeki bud va Yeki Nabud (1921) is preceded by a famous introduction in which he gives perhaps the first definition of Persian popular culture and suggests a modern approach to Persian prose writing.
www.iranheritage.com /hedayatconference/abstract.htm   (1979 words)

  
 Jalal Al-e Ahmad - free-definition   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
He was buried in Firouzabadi Mosque in Rey city.
In this sense, he is a follower of avant-garde Persian novelists like Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh.
Since the subject of his works (novels, essays, travelogues and monographs) is usually cultural, social and political issues, symbolic representations and sarcastic expressions are a regular pattern of his books.
www.free-definition.com /Jalal-Al-e-Ahmad.html   (371 words)

  
 List of Iranians   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Abbas Mirza, Crown Prince to Fath Ali Shah =
Zahra Eshraghi, grand-daughter of Ayatollah Khomeini and wife of Mohammad Reza Khatami
Shaul Mofaz See also: List of people by nationality
www.serebella.com /encyclopedia/article-List_of_Iranians.html   (416 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
For background information on Hedayat's formative years and his life and family, the reader is referred to Kamahad's Modern Persian Prose Literature (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1966), pp.
See also Abdul Ali Dastgheyb's Naqd-i Asar-i Sadeq-i Hedayat (A Critical Study of the Works of Sadeq Hedayat) (Tehran: Sephr Press, 1977), pp.
See also Seyyed Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh, 'Dargozasht-i Hedayat" ("Hedayat's Death"), Sukhan, vol.
www.iles.umn.edu /Faculty/bashiri/hedlifenotes.html   (348 words)

  
 Mohammad Ali Jamalzade - Persian Photo - Fotopages.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Everyone has a digital camera today and we all take a lot of photos.
But if your photos still have trees coming out of your father’s head, mom has red eye, and your beloved pet is never facing the camera then here are some tips to help you take better photos...
1922: Novelist Mohammad Ali Jamalzade, who wrote Yeki Bood Yeki Nabood
shw.fotopages.com /46735.html   (70 words)

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